rawstory.com — Back in December of 2005, the CEO of Diebold who once famously declared that he would "deliver" Ohio for President Bush resigned. This happened immediately after bloggers broke a story "that Diebold had put corporate interests ahead of the interests of voters".
Oct 31, 2006 View in Crawl 4
devindotcomOct 31, 2006
Kind of misleading! Definitely from LAST YEAR.Try "Once upon a time IN 2005... a Diebold CEO resignED."
jonforthewinOct 31, 2006
Would you let a felon count your votes?
goodbrainOct 31, 2006
Voting machines are "malfunctioning," and giving votes to republicans. This isn't old news. It's the backstory on new news.
kirknessOct 31, 2006
rad, more proof. so what the hell is being done about it?
snockhocksterOct 31, 2006
Yes, how dare the 'liberals' demand transparency in the voting process.The requests to open the source code to ensure its integrity, the pleas for a paper trail to substantiate the electronic results, and the desire for an open and honest election is just too much!!!Damn 'liberals' expecting their vote to count for who they cast it for....
devindotcomOct 31, 2006
I honestly don't know why I got buried for pointing out that this is a year-old article and the poster tried to make it sound like it just happened. I hate Diebold but we have enough posts about them already without misleading ones.
saicheleOct 31, 2006
hahahahahahahah! F-off, Diebold.
stevenwardNov 1, 2006
Seriously, you guys know absolutely nothing about Diebold as a corporation. Voting machines are like 1% of their business. They provide extremely advanced security systems, vaults, ATM's, as well as the ID cards most college campuses use to provide students with an easy way to buy things. If you want to bash a company you should do your research. If you did you'd find out that the majority of the company hated the previous CEO because he was running them into the ground. His resignation had nothing to do with these stupid stories about voting machines, but rather the fact that he was a jerk that was alienating the basic principles that Diebold had ran on for the last 144 years.